Rolling Stone: Kobe Bryant is 'the third-best guy' behind Durant
By Trey Kerby
Ball Don't Lie
Can we all agree that LeBron James is the best player in the league? No, we can't? Fair enough. But let's just pretend like he is for the time being, even though it wouldn't really be pretending.
Anyways, if we're saying LeBron is the best player in the league, that means there's a battle for the next in line. And while it doesn't have the allure or cache of gunnin' for that No. 1 spot, it's still pretty intense.
A lot of people will say it's Kobe Bryant. And there'd surely be votes for a healthy Chris Paul. But according to Rolling Stone's Matt Taibbi, it's Kevin Durant, and it's not even close.
Kobe in reality has been no better than the second-best player in the league for about 18 months now — LeBron James passed him somewhere back in '08. He still had a legit claim to Alpha Dog status coming in to this year because he'd just won a championship. But there's a big difference between being "in the conversation" for the top-dog status and being the third-best guy — and one who's getting older. And that's where he is, third, because Durant is suddenly poster-izing the whole league.
Could it be true? Has Kevin Durant really passed up Kobe Bryant in just his third year in the league? Durant scores more on higher shooting percentages while taking less shots. He's also a better rebounder. Not to mention, he's the biggest reason for the Thunder being a playoff team. That's a pretty strong case.
Of course, Kobe's biggest contributions don't always show up in the box score. He's been unstoppable in the clutch this year, and he's rededicated himself to defense. And he's done all this while remaining the main offensive force for the Western Conference's best team. Oh, and he has four championships. That's also a pretty strong case.
When asked about the article by Kevin Ding of the Orange County Register, Kobe was deferential.
The "old Kobe" laughed when he was told about the comparison.
"It's an honor," was Kobe's first response. He then called it "entertaining."
"It's a huge honor. It shows a sign of respect for all the work I put in," Bryant said Monday.
Something tells me Kobe isn't too keen on letting Kevin Durant pass him by, and I'd imagine he's not going to agree that he's even fallen as far as No. 2. Nonetheless, the future's in good hands.
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From The Orange County Register. The Rolling Stone piece is in mogrovejo's post, #9.
Move over, Kobe… Kevin’s here
by Janis Carr
OCRegister.com
Everyone has an opinion, and Rolling Stone writer Matt Taibbi’s is this: Oklahoma City’s Kevin Durant has surpassed Kobe Bryant as the second-best player in the NBA (behind King You-Know-Who James).
Taibbi writes in an article led, “The New Kobe” that Bryant has been “no better than the second-best player in the league for about 18 months now” but his status is in jeopardy because Durant is “suddenly poster-izing the whole league.”
Guess four championships don’t mean much.
Taibbi went on to say:
“(Durant’s ability) to challenge demented three-faced narcissist Kobe Bryant and the Laker hegemony has been the highlight of the year … The now-inexorable climb down the dominance ladder for a megalomaniac like Kobe is a tale every sports fan outside L.A. can’t help but appreciate …
“Kobe has always been smart and predatory and pathologically driven, and he’s going to maximize every last drop of ability in an attempt to stay on the throne, so the Lakers will hold off the Thunder for a few more years. But the moment is coming when Kobe is going to throw everything he has at Durant, and this wide-eyed, lanky, respectful kid – nothing personal, Mr. Bryant – is going to kick his @$& anyway. That’ll be a delicious moment, and it might even happen this year.” (Sorry, Rolling Stone Magazine doesn’t provide a link to this story).
Don’t count on Durant coming anywhere close to Bryant. Even at 31 years old and with the mileage that comes with 12-plus NBA seasons, Bryant still has more talent and more drive to kick more than one up-and-comers rear end. And do you really think with the Lakers in position to defend their NBA le, Bryant worries about Durant?